The Wave by Susan Casey

The Wave

by Susan Casey

The have long been mariners' tales of 100-foot rogue waves - gargantuan monsters that sink super-tankers in the blink of an eye.

But waves that high violate the laws of physics, so science has dismissed them as myth. Until now.

In February 2000 the research ship, RRS Discovery, was trapped by a vortex of mammoth waves in the North Atlantic. Amazingly the ship survived and its state-of-the-art equipment registered waves nearing 100-feet. Something scary is brewing in the planet's waters. And with 72% of earth covered by sea, this is serious business.


Cut to Maui, Hawaii, a surf mecca where a 100-foot wave is seen as the ultimate challenge. Casey follows extreme surfing legend, Laird Hamilton, and his unique tribe as they hunt down this grail.

The action zips from Lloyds of London to rusty oil rigs, tropical Tahitian surf shacks to supercomputer data labs, as Casey juxtaposes the exploits of big-wave surfers against scientists' urgent efforts to predict devastating rogue waves.

Like Jon Krakauer's Into Thin Air, The Wave is an extraordinary story about man confronting nature at its most ferocious.

Reviewed by remo on

4 of 5 stars

Share
La autora se lanza a dar vueltas por el mundo, entrevistando a varias decenas de personas, para hablar de un tema: las olas. El libro es tres cuartas partes de surfing, pero no surfing del de todos los días, sino SURFING. Los grandes del deporte charlan sobre sus correrías y sus encuentros cercanos con la muerte durante todo el libro. También aparecen científicos que modelan olas y tempestades, que vigilan por satélite la altura media del primer tercil de las olas por todo el mundo, que estudian la ralentización de la corriente termohalina... Y no faltan los especialistas en salvamento, que hablan sobre barcos que encontraron su destino en la feroz pared de una ola de treinta metros en alta mar.
El libro es muy interesante, se deja leer y trata un tema que me apasiona. Me ha gustado mucho.

Last modified on

Reading updates

  • Started reading
  • 28 July, 2013: Finished reading
  • 28 July, 2013: Reviewed